‘Stories from the Brantford Gaol’ exhibit opens at museum

Stories from the Brantford Gaol exhibit opens at museum

Curator Nathan Etherington hopes the new “Stories from the Brantford Gaol” exhibit at Brant County Museum and Archives will make for a fun and educational family outing during March break.

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The largely information-based exhibit covers notable cases and escapes from the early years of the correctional facility, which operated between 1852 and 2017, serving Brantford and Brant County.

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When the provincial government recently put together a heritage assessment of the former jail — at the back of the downtown Brantford courthouse — they reached out to Etherington to see what information the archives had.

Part of the old jail can still be seen behind the Brantford courthouse. It operated between 1852 and 2017, serving Brantford and Brant County, locking up men, women and even youth in the early days. Photo by Celeste Percy-Beauregard /Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

In addition to interesting artifacts — like the massive cell padlocks, and a handwritten book cataloging recipes served to the inmates — Etherington also uncovered fascinating stories from entries in an early inspector’s ledger “that other people have never talked about,” he told The Hamilton Spectator on a sneak peak of the exhibit.

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A “tamer version” will run through the March break — although it does touch on hangings that took place — with darker stories to be added later, Etherington said, adding that it’s meant to be entertaining, not terrifying.

To make the museum kid-friendly for younger attendees, there’s also a museum scavenger hunt and a take-home coloring book based on the exhibits.

With admission by donation, and additional exhibits spread across the three floors of the museum — including a Ukrainian exhibit developed with Memories of Brantford, a project celebrating Brantford’s immigrant history, closing at the end of this month — Etherington said it makes for a fun “ drop-in” activity.

Hours are noon to 5 pm Monday to Friday and 10 am to 5 pm on Saturday. For more information, visit facebook.com/BrantHistoricalSociety.

Celeste Percy-Beauregard is a Local Journalism Initiative Reporter based at the Hamilton Spectator. The initiative is funded by the Government of Canada.

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